Wired vs wireless svs triband

A

Aust11n

Audioholic Intern
I have a denon X2800H. I have had some mind boggling experiences with subwoofers. I will try and keep it quick and simple. I bought a klipsch r-120swi with my brand new home theater system just to have quick cheap reliable subwoofer and quite honestly it was great but with the power I got from this cheap junk subwoofer it made me want something obnoxious. So I bought a RSL speedwoofer 12s and it came in I was hyped plugged it in and it had nothing on the cheap klipsch. Myself and everyone within RSL worked vigorously to solve this problem and we were never able to do so. We did everything we could to get the raw power it was supposed to deliver and I just wasn’t able to ever get any power from the subwoofer. It was returned. Ordered a Tonewinner d4000 same size sub just bigger amp. It was indeed louder apon plug and play but it was still week and I still preferred the cheap klipsch. The owner of Tonewinner is amazing with customer support he has also done everything he could to help. The last thing we tried was the svs wireless triband. That brought the subwoofer to life. Completely night and day difference my home is rattling just like I had hoped. But it really bothers me I can’t get that same power when I connect things with the cable. Does anyone have any idea why the hell a wireless connection is kicking the wired connections ass. It’s so frustrating because I want to run the cable to avoid WiFi interference but the power is just weak with the wire and I can’t figure it out.
 
isolar8001

isolar8001

Audioholic Field Marshall
I have a denon X2800H. I have had some mind boggling experiences with subwoofers. I will try and keep it quick and simple. I bought a klipsch r-120swi with my brand new home theater system just to have quick cheap reliable subwoofer and quite honestly it was great but with the power I got from this cheap junk subwoofer it made me want something obnoxious. So I bought a RSL speedwoofer 12s and it came in I was hyped plugged it in and it had nothing on the cheap klipsch. Myself and everyone within RSL worked vigorously to solve this problem and we were never able to do so. We did everything we could to get the raw power it was supposed to deliver and I just wasn’t able to ever get any power from the subwoofer. It was returned. Ordered a Tonewinner d4000 same size sub just bigger amp. It was indeed louder apon plug and play but it was still week and I still preferred the cheap klipsch. The owner of Tonewinner is amazing with customer support he has also done everything he could to help. The last thing we tried was the svs wireless triband. That brought the subwoofer to life. Completely night and day difference my home is rattling just like I had hoped. But it really bothers me I can’t get that same power when I connect things with the cable. Does anyone have any idea why the hell a wireless connection is kicking the wired connections ass. It’s so frustrating because I want to run the cable to avoid WiFi interference but the power is just weak with the wire and I can’t figure it out.
So, you ditched the Pioneer you had and now have the same exact issue with a Denon.

Like TLSGuy told you back on October 14th
" No idea what you are doing wrong, but you are doing something idiotic or you have a faulty unit."

I think we have ruled out faulty unit now...and you sure haven't had faulty subs. That leaves operator error.
 
A

Aust11n

Audioholic Intern
Could be at this point so please point in the right direction I’d love to have a stupid easy fix
 
isolar8001

isolar8001

Audioholic Field Marshall
Could be at this point so please point in the right direction I’d love to have a stupid easy fix
No idea.
If the folks at RSL and Tonewinner couldn't figure out what you are doing wrong, it's going to be really hard for anyone else without seeing in person what you are (or not) doing.

All the wireless adaptor is doing is raising the input voltage to the sub...many of them do.
 
A

Aust11n

Audioholic Intern
It’s really simple at this point I either run a rca cable from the sub out 1 to the subwoofer itself where it connects to a y splitter that goes to Line In R and L or I can remove the y splitter and plug it straight into the line in port. Which it works buts it’s just not bad ass like it should be so when I go wireless its power is really boosted. When it’s wireless it is going from the sub out 1 to svs triband audio in R LFE. Then the other svs triband connection is coming from the audio out R LFE into the y splitter that goes into the line in R and L in
 
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